Example sentences of "[v-ing] him out [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Rocastle got a page long interview expressing some puzzlement at Wilko keeping him out of the first team .
2 If she was n't , he slipped into her mind , the memory of her response to him both torment and humiliation , and dislodging him once he entered her thoughts proved far more difficult than keeping him out in the first place .
3 In spite of his explanations they 'd insisted on signing him out at the little cabin , and he 'd snatched the case out of his car and run back , wondering why it always rained .
4 Soon afterwards , however , Ellcock became the ‘ nearly man ’ again , entering hospital for further surgery to remove the screws that had snapped in his back , ruling him out for the rest of the summer and , ultimately , despite encouraging practice sessions with the England A party last winter , the immediate future .
5 Ipswich were unfortunate to lose winger Jeremy English with fractured ribs , ruling him out for the remainder of the season .
6 The Scot said : ‘ I was one punch away from knocking him out in the fifth and if I had n't been injured , I would have finished him . ’
7 ‘ Never mind what kind , ’ said Gurder , pushing him out of the way .
8 Duvall was suddenly standing on the step above him , pushing him out of the way and stepping down past him .
9 The Englishman sensed that the big personal build-up was a blind to hide Muldoon 's real reason for wanting him out of the country .
10 They existed , too , somewhere , seeking him out in every corner , and if they ever found him they would surely drag him back to the terror from which he looked forward to escaping , finally and permanently , soon .
11 The bell for Compline rang , the time she had set herself for hounding him out at the wicket , into a world he was , perhaps , already beginning to regret surrendering , but which he might have found none too hospitable to a runaway Benedictine novice .
12 The Army had taught him that , too , and the SAS acceptance tests had rammed the lesson home by sending him out over the damp Brecon Beacons with a 55-lb Bergen rucksack knowing he had to cover a certain distance in a certain time but not knowing that when he had done it , there would n't be the trucks they had promised but a vague assur-ance of a cup of tea if he kept on marching a few more miles in that direction .
13 Meanwhile he had to tread very carefully , because if David suspected that his talk of cutting him out of the business was more than just talk , there was no telling how he would react .
14 He does n't talk to me much now because I 'm afraid I 've been the one who 's been tipping him out of the church when he 's smoking .
15 Imperials both , they did not follow the local custom of farming him out to a neighbour .
16 They had found him quicker than he 'd anticipated , sniffing him out through the darkened streets .
17 McDonald has some well known musicians , such as Pino Palladino and Benmont Tench , helping him out on the disc , but even their presence fails to add the bit of gloss that is evidently lacking .
18 Instead , I suggested Jeanne and John tire Moby with a few chase and throw-fetch games in the garden before taking him out for a walk on an extendable lead .
19 Stanley 's family helped initially by taking him out to the pub , but he was worse on his return .
20 He felt grateful to her for dragging him out of the pit and back into the daylight .
21 Most appropriately , his approach has been to break through the author 's privacy , effectively dragging him out of the closet and giving an imaginative frame to the book by presenting the deplorable facts of Burroughs 's life .
22 She pulled harder , dragging him out into the path of a waltzing couple , trying to wrap his arms round her waist .
23 The little boy 's father was lifting him out of the boat .
24 But this caused Aboyeur to veer away from the rails and collide with Craganour , carrying him out towards the centre of the course and interfering with the finishing runs of Nimbus — who had been far enough back at Tattenham Corner for his jockey to have seen the suffragette incident — and Great Sport , both coming up the stands side .
25 Elliott hurt cruciate ligaments when playing for Pisa , putting him out of the game for 18 months .
26 At home this meant putting him out into the hall of the bungalow ( where there were no stairs ) .
27 A battleground of historic events and a jungle of eyes watching him out of the gloom , bright eyes and eyes dulled from misuse , flaring nostrils and faded plumage and gaping jaws and once-golden beaks .
28 They were all studiously avoiding meeting his gaze , though he thought they were watching him out of the sides of their eyes .
29 She walked a little distance away from him , watching him out of the corner of her eye .
30 ‘ Take over , ’ she ordered , watching him out of the corner of her eye .
  Next page